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Behavioral evidence of olfactory imprinting during embryonic and larval stages in lake sturgeon

Natural odors guide reproductive migrations in many fish species, and odors experienced during early life are suspected to influence stream selection decisions by spawning adults, including lake sturgeon. We measured behavioral responses to artificial odorants in juvenile lake sturgeon and found evi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Conservation physiology 2023-01, Vol.11 (1), p.coad045-coad045
Main Authors: Kimmel, Jacob G, Buchinger, Tyler J, Larson, Douglas L, Baker, Edward A, Zorn, Troy G, Scribner, Kim T, Li, Weiming
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Natural odors guide reproductive migrations in many fish species, and odors experienced during early life are suspected to influence stream selection decisions by spawning adults, including lake sturgeon. We measured behavioral responses to artificial odorants in juvenile lake sturgeon and found evidence for olfactory imprinting during two early life stages. Abstract Many migratory fishes are thought to navigate to natal streams using olfactory cues learned during early life stages. However, direct evidence for early-life olfactory imprinting is largely limited to Pacific salmon, and other species suspected to imprint show life history traits and reproductive strategies that raise uncertainty about the generality of the salmonid-based conceptual model of olfactory imprinting in fishes. Here, we studied early-life olfactory imprinting in lake sturgeon (Acipenser fulvescens), which have a life cycle notably different from Pacific salmon, but are nonetheless hypothesized to home via similar mechanisms. We tested one critical prediction of the hypothesis that early-life olfactory imprinting guides natal homing in lake sturgeon: that exposure to odorants during early-life stages results in increased activity when exposed to those odorants later in life. Lake sturgeon were exposed to artificial odorants (phenethyl alcohol and morpholine) during specific developmental windows and durations (limited to the egg, free-embryo, exogenous feeding larvae and juvenile stages), and later tested as juveniles for behavioral responses to the odorants that were demonstrative of olfactory memory. Experiments revealed that lake sturgeon reared in stream water mixed with artificial odorants for as little as 7 days responded to the odorants in behavioral assays over 50 days after the initial exposure, specifically implicating the free-embryo and larval stages as critical imprinting periods. Our study provides evidence for olfactory imprinting in a non-salmonid fish species, and supports further consideration of conservation tactics such as stream-side rearing facilities that are designed to encourage olfactory imprinting to targeted streams during early life stages. Continued research on lake sturgeon can contribute to a model of olfactory imprinting that is more generalizable across diverse fish species and will inform conservation actions for one of the world’s most imperiled fish taxonomic groups.
ISSN:2051-1434
2051-1434
DOI:10.1093/conphys/coad045